Finance News

China stocks poised to reopen with markets fixated on fiscal stimulus


Shoppers on Nanjing East Road in Shanghai, China, on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024. 

Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Chinese investors are looking for more policy direction from China’s top economic planning body on Tuesday, when mainland markets return from a week-long holiday.  

A panel of senior officials from the National Development and Reform Commission, including chairman Zheng Shanjie, will brief reporters on the implementation of stimulus policies at the press conference on Tuesday at 10 a.m. local time, according to the notice from the State Council on Sunday

Economists and traders are closely watching for additional policy measures as Beijing has signaled a sense of urgency in bringing its economy back on track to hit the annual growth target of “around 5%.” 

Before the week-long holiday, authorities unveiled a flurry of stimulus policies, including interest rate cuts, lower cash reserve requirements at banks, looser property purchase rules and liquidity support for stock markets.

Chinese major indexes have surged over 25% as investors cheer on the barrage of stimulus measures. Last week, China’s CSI 300 blue-chip index extended a nine-day winning streak, surging over 8% Monday, before the market closed for a week-long holiday. Hong Kong stocks, however, reopened Wednesday last week and traded above 23,000 on Monday for the first time since 2022.

The futures contracts tied to MSCI China A50 Connect Index, which tracks 50 mega-cap stocks in the A-share market, have surged nearly 15% since Sept. 30, to 2,536.6 as of 2:30 p.m. on Monday. The SGX FTSE China A50 Index futures also surged 12.7% to 15,672 over the same holiday period.

Speculating rally

People walk along the Huguosi street, Xicheng district, a dedicated food street in Beijing on August 23, 2024. 

Adek Berry | AFP | Getty Images

In the very near term, the optimism might continue “albeit at a less furious pace,” said Lynn Song, chief economist of Greater China at ING, suggesting that policymakers might press forward with more supportive policies to “capitalize on the positive momentum coming out of the long break.” 

But the rally’s momentum depends on the actual implementation of previously announced policies and “how soon and aggressively” policymakers come up with follow-up support measures to boost consumer…



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